| ichael . benson on Wed, 5 May 1999 14:03:01 +0000 |
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| Syndicate: Tony Judt on The Reason Why |
The Reason Why
TONY JUDT
The New York Review of Books
May 20, 1999
With the onset of war in the Balkans, President Clinton
has taken to wrapping himself in the cloak of Winston
Churchill. Defending his own decision to face up to
Slobodan Milosevic and bomb Serbia, he asked an
audience on March 23: Wouldn't everyone be better off
if people had listened to Churchill and stood up to
Hitler?
The implicit comparison does not merit comment, but it
prompts a different, more plausible historical reference.
For there was once another British leader and
statesman. Like Bill Clinton, he came to office with a
long record of experience in local government and built
his political coalition upon a claim to competence in
domestic management. Like Bill Clinton, he found
himself faced with an unexpected crisis in Eastern
Europe. He too calculated that public opinion was not
interested in overseas military ventures, and he
accordingly went to great lengths to negotiate and
compromise with a foreign dictator, assuring his fellow
citizens that he had no intention of dragging them into a
ground war over a faraway country of which "we know
nothing."
When the foreign dictator finally went too far and
undertook the systematic bloody destruction of an
Eastern European state, the British statesman reluctantly
declared war-a war that he pursued with such
lassitude and incompetence that he was finally replaced
by Winston Churchill himself. That British statesman, of
course, was Neville Chamberlain-and *his* mantle fits
all too snugly upon the shoulders of our present
commander-in-chief.
I invoke this comparison as a reminder that we can
indeed learn from History-but only if we choose the
right examples. The war in the Balkans has been the
occasion for all manner of claims about the things the
past does and doesn't teach. We have been told that it
is an "age-old" conflict dating at least to 1389, and that
our intervention would change nothing: a half-truth
invoked to support a self-serving falsehood. We have
been told by leftists nostalgic for cold war certainties
that the US's own past misdealings overseas make us
no better than those we are attacking and that we thus
have no business judging the behavior of others: a
sophistic assertion of moral equivalence that cuts the ground
from under the very universal principles upon which the
left itself purports to stand.
We have been told by isolationists of the right that we
have no reason to care or react to overseas events that
don't touch our "vital interests": as though, since 1941,
America's interests-however amorally
calculated-have not been intimately dependent upon
developments around the globe. And we have been
reminded by realists of all stripes that we failed to stop
mass murder in Rwanda, Cambodia, or Kurdistan, and
thus look rather odd taking a stand in Kosovo: as
though our past irresponsibility in the face of genocide
were a warrant and justification for repeating the
mistake. Today, it seems, it is those who remember the
(recent) past who are doomed to repeat it.
If we must invoke the past, let us not be quite so
selective. What is happening in the Balkans did not
begin six centuries ago, but it does have a history.
Ethnic cleansing was not invented by Slobodan
Milosevic. To confine ourselves to the present century,
population clearances have a long pedigree. After
World War I an unsuccessful effort was made to leave
people where they were and draw new boundaries
around them in the name of self-determination-leaving
Poland, Czechoslovakia, and especially the newborn
Yugoslavia as multinational states under nationalist
rulers. The experiment failed.
World War II produced the opposite outcome: with
the notable exception of Poland, which was shifted
westward in accordance with Soviet dictates, frontiers
were left in place and people were moved instead. By
1945 there were some 46 million people who had been
forced to leave their homes in East-Central Europe
alone; most of them never returned. Ukrainians were
expelled from Poland, Hungarians from
Czechoslovakia, and Germans from everywhere (there
were 13 million German "expellees" in the Federal
Republic by 1949). The complex and conflicted social
and "ethnic" landscape of the continent had been
radically simplified: by involuntary emigration,
expulsion, resettlement, imprisonment, and
extermination.
The ethnic cleansing undertaken by Hitler and Stalin
thus "solved" the ethnic problem in Europe. The solution was not one
that the democracies of the West would have sought, nor were they in
a position to prevent it. But in conjunction with the enforced
stability of the cold war, the radical "tidying up" of Europe's
interwoven nations and peoples prepared the ground not just for the
peace and prosperity of Western Europe but for the post-Communist
trajectory of Eastern Europe too (except, significantly, in
Yugoslavia, where neither Hitler nor Stalin had been in a position to
enforce his writ during or after the war). The majority of Eastern
European politicians today have little interest in reviving memories
of injustices suffered at the hands of their erstwhile ethnic
foes-Ukrainians in Poland and vice versa, Transylvanian Hungarians in
Romania, etc.; the prospect of a European future trumps the demagogic
advantages to be gained from invoking local pasts. The exception
proves the rule, and not just in Serbia: Slovakia's Meciar saw
little hope of securing early entry into the EU and thus felt no
inhibition about exploiting nationalist sentiment against the
remaining Hungarians in his country. He was defeated in Slovakia's
last election.
But it is one thing to build a postwar world on the
unacknowledged foundations of someone else's crimes,
quite another to endorse those crimes for the future.
Since 1945 we have set in place a plethora of
precedents (the Nuremberg and subsequent trials),
treaties, charters (notably that of the UN itself), and
accords such as the 1948 Genocide Convention,
whose purpose has been to outlaw any further
"solutions" of this kind and to provide legal and
practical grounds for intervention and punishment
should someone seek to undertake them. At first this
framework of international disapproval for final
solutions of one sort or another was, correctly,
understood to be an effective, realistic response to
behavior that was not only immoral but deeply
disruptive of international relations, and thus a threat to
everyone's interests, however selfishly conceived. But
the passage of time, and the fond illusions fostered by
the security of the cold war era and the fall of
communism, have returned us to an earlier perspective
in which ethics and national self-interest have parted
company. We are now taught to think of foreign
conflicts, in James Baker's deathless phrase, as fights in
which we have "no dog."
This is curious, and made curiouser still by the
occasional emphasis upon "national sovereignty." Like General
Pinochet's defenders in Chile and elsewhere, the critics of armed
intervention in Yugoslavia point to the inviolability of sovereign
states. If Slobodan Milosevic wants to do nasty things in the poor
little country he rules, that's his business; even if it means
stamping roughshod over years of nonviolent attempts at conciliation
and local self-rule by Kosovo's Albanian representatives. But if he
starts crossing frontiers, it becomes our affair. Even if we don't
want to refer to the dictators of the Thirties, we ought to find this
stance rather bizarre: we live today in a world where the "sovereign
state" is hemmed in by an ever-growing body of international laws,
regulations, treaties, and unions. "Globalization," if it means
anything, means that the national state has been forced to abandon
many of the economic and fiscal instruments that once defined its
claim to autonomy. If a sovereign state can't make multinational
companies conform to its tax laws, can't ignore international
regulations on air traffic safety or food manufacture, and can't
block the cross-border flow of money and goods without facing the
wrath of various international agencies and banking authorities, why
are we so quick to acknowledge its right to rape and murder its
citizens?
The war on Slobodan Milosevic, then, is a war we have to
fight (albeit we are fighting it in the wrong way and under
the most inappropriate leadership). Our responsibility is
not diminished by the fact that in many ways we invented
Milosevic-he was "our man" in the Balkans (Richard
Holbrooke built a second career on his assignment to
"deal" with the Serbian dictator, a project which required
that the latter be accorded an appropriate level of
recognition and honor for many long years). The end of the
cold war has not brought History to a close, nor has it
returned us to the starting point. But it has confronted our
reluctant leaders (political and military alike) with a
reminder of something they either forgot or never knew:
that the extermination of minorities within national frontiers
has many recent European precedents. It is illegal,
unethical, and threatens the interests of everyone. But it
works, as Slobodan Milosevic, Franjo Tudjman, and
others well know. Unless we want to collaborate not just
in the slaughter of Kosovo's Albanians but also in the
dismantling of the fragile international system built on the
ruined landscape of the last great exercise in ethnic
cleansing, this is our war, too, and we had better win it.
-April 22, 1999
-----------------------------------
Michael Benson <michael.benson@pristop.si>
<http://www.ljudmila.org/kinetikon/>
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